Because Our Fathers Lied: A Memoir of Truth and Family, from Vietnam to Today

Author:   Craig McNamara
Publisher:   Back Bay Books
ISBN:  

9780316282338


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   06 June 2023
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Because Our Fathers Lied: A Memoir of Truth and Family, from Vietnam to Today


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Author:   Craig McNamara
Publisher:   Back Bay Books
Imprint:   Back Bay Books
Dimensions:   Width: 13.70cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 20.80cm
Weight:   0.272kg
ISBN:  

9780316282338


ISBN 10:   0316282332
Pages:   304
Publication Date:   06 June 2023
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Behind great world tragedies are great personal tragedies. Craig McNamara has written a gripping, aching, memoir of what it was like to be the only son of a decent man with the blood of thousands on his hands. --Evan Thomas, New York Times bestselling author of Ike's Bluff: President Eisenhower's Secret Battle to Save the World Because Our Fathers Lied gives readers a vivid, front-row view of the divisiveness in one very prominent family, and through that family, a view of the national divisiveness that contin ued long after the Vietnam War... a loving but brutally honest account of McNamara's difficult relationship with his father. --Roger Bishop, BookPage (starred review) A captivating text for anyone grappling with the pain of possessing a parent who did horrible things... If Camelot really was a kind of court of midcentury kings, a high watermark for liberal capitalism distant from our moment of fracture, how fortunate we are to have such a thoughtful account of that world from someone who was born into it. --Noah Kulwin, New Republic Anyone who lived through the sixties remembers the Vietnam War, Robert McNamara, and the intensity of feelings about the role he played in the prosecution of that war. Indeed, rightly or wrongly, it became known as McNamara's War...This is a story -- an unknown story -- about their [Robert and Craig's] relationship and how the hurt of the conflict in Vietnam, a national sorrow, spilled over into a personal relationship...A story about a generational conflict as well as an international conflict, and an important book in our understanding of that now-distant era. --Errol Morris, director of The Fog of War: Eleven Lessons from the Life of Robert S. McNamara Craig McNamara has given us a profound, wrenching, brave, and essential memoir - a must read for anyone who wants to understand the tragedy of the Vietnam War and why its echoes are still being felt in America today. He carries the painful burden of being the son of Robert McNamara -- architect of a war he knew at the time was unwinnable -- with tremendous grace. Craig's humanity, generosity of spirit, and compassion come through on every page of this intimate, devastating and revelatory journey into a dark time of promises broken, illusions shattered, lives lost. --Lynn Novick, co-director and producer of The Vietnam War Craig McNamara has written a courageous and moving memoir about his fractured relationship with his father, Robert McNamara, a microcosm of the heartbreaking divisions that sundered the nation during the Vietnam War. It is an unsparingly honest account about father and son, a powerful story of love, loss and resilience that sheds new light on one of the most convulsive periods in American history. --Philip Taubman, former New York Times Washington bureau chief and Moscow bureau chief Craig McNamara has written an important book that should be read by every American if we are ever to truly heal from that war. --Ron Kovic, Vietnam Veteran and author of Born on the Fourth of July Craig McNamara has written an intimate personal story about the afterlife of America's disastrous Vietnam experience. His attempts to understand his own father, one of the most controversial figures of the 20th century, have created a new chapter in that history. His voice is as morally focused as any that resisted the war. --Daniel Ellsberg Craig McNamara, in this heartfelt memoir, shares the story of his coming of age, haunted by the horrors of the Vietnam War and his father's role in it. Hobnobbing at the White House, war protesting in Berkeley, motorcycling to Chile and even living on Easter Island, then becoming a walnut farmer in Northern California--McNamara recounts an absorbing tale of father and son, bound together but deeply separated by different lives and understandings of truth and loyalty. The telling is clear and candid. --Jerry Brown Craig McNamara's memoir is an emotional revelation from a tragic time in history with many parallels to the present. Despite the painfully felt influence of his father, Craig has preserved in these pages a hopeful and loving vision of life. This is a moving, remarkable book. --Rose Styron If a father's lethal lie could be redeemed by a son who speaks the heartfelt truth, this book would do it. A poignant, crushing account that closes a circle not only for Craig McNamara, but for his generation. --James Carroll, New York Times bestselling author of House of War: The Pentagon and the Disastrous Rise of American Power In a graceful, easy prose, Craig McNamara probes his shame as a son of privilege and why he gravitated toward the antiwar movement in the late 1960s. --Hamilton Cain, Oprah Daily Like the farmer willing to labor another season, searching for one more harvest, Craig McNamara invites us into a rare conversation about history that defines us as he explores loss while caring about the meaning of family - a son's struggle with a father and the shadow of Viet Nam. --David Mas Masumoto, organic farmer and author of Wisdom of the Last Farmer: Harvesting Legacies from the Land McNamara's staggeringly heartfelt debut memoir is the tale of a son's lifelong yearning for his father to look him squarely in the eye and tell him the unvarnished truth, regardless of the scale of his missteps or regrets. In that sense it's a universally relatable story since countless parents shield their children from hard facts and struggle to be present. --Jessica Zach, San Francisco Chronicle More than a decade after his death, Robert Strange McNamara remains one of the most compelling public figures in United States history. As Kennedy and Johnson's powerful secretary of defense, McNamara helped plunge the country into the disaster of the Vietnam War -- and in one way or another struggled during the rest of his long life to explain and redeem himself. Craig McNamara's memoir, Because Our Fathers Lied, is a painfully honest and uncompromising quest to come to grips with his relationship with his father -- and to disentangle the complex ties between love and political truth. --Mark Danner, author of Spiral: Trapped in the Forever War Moving and courageous... a complicated man comes into intimate view, as does the 'mixture of love and rage' at the heart of their relationship... Through his own personal story of disappointment and disillusionment, McNamara captures an intergenerational conflict and a journey of moral identity. --Adrienne Westenfeld, Esquire Robert McNamara's lies about Vietnam not only ruptured a nation, they tore at the heart of his young, sensitive son, animating his journey from dark legacy to a life of purpose. Because Our Fathers Lied is a deeply moving tale about a singular relationship as unresolved as the war itself. --Garry Trudeau, creator of Doonesbury Searing... [McNamara] has made a noble effort to shed as much as possible of the pain his father bequeathed him, and the rest of our nation. --Charles Kaiser, The Guardian That Craig McNamara has survived, and thrived, and given us this staggering book, is something of a miracle. --Joe Klein, Washington Post This is a courageous, devastating memoir, written from the inside out. While U.S. policy was conducted from an icy 30,000-ft. perch, for Craig McNamara, the Vietnam War was an intimate family drama full of complex moral dilemmas, betrayal, and family self-awareness and actualization. --Ken Burns, filmmaker This memoir is both fascinating and heartbreaking. Craig McNamara has taken the monumental figure of his father, Robert McNamara, and brings him to life in a profoundly intimate way. This is not just a beautifully written book about the past history of our country, it tells an urgent story about the present. Through the experiences of his becoming an activist and travelling the world, we deeply understand Craig's passionate commitment to equity and sustainability. --Alice Waters, author of Coming to My Senses


Author Information

Craig McNamara is an American businessman and farmer serving as the president and owner of Sierra Orchards, a walnut farm. McNamara is also the founder and president of the Center for Land-Based Learning. He was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan and is the only son of U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. McNamara lives in California with his wife and three children.

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